It will come as welcome news to the likes of Frank Lampard who famously had a goal ruled out in England's second round match against Germany in South Africa in 2010 despite the ball clearly crossing the line.
GoalControl, the official provider of the system, re-tested the technology at Rio's Maracana stadium -- the venue of the World Cup final -- in April ahead of the tournament which starts today.
"It is 100 percent accurate. The system will work," Dirk Broichhausen, managing director of GoalControl, said at a presentation at the Maracana.
There are seven cameras trained on each goal and the cameras each take 500 pictures per second, sending a "GOAL" message to the referee's watch if the ball is in, GoalControl chairman Bjoern Lindner explained.
He stressed, however: "The referee has the last call. He can override the system any time he wants. But he knows the system is reliable.
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